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Sunday, February 25, 2018

Book Review: Audacity

“In under an hour, [the sun] is gone againslipped past the edge of the next buildinglike an egg yolksliding out of the shell.”

Poetic imagery can be so fresh sometimes. It’s like a breath
of fresh air, even if the images aren’t entirely aesthetically pleasing. What’s
so nice about an egg yoke slipping away after such a short time period? I
suppose that’s the point. It’s supposed to sound uneasy as daylight is short
and precious in a large city like New York.

The above quotation is just one of the main pieces that
stuck out to me, and I could quote them all, but then I might as well hand you
the book.

Book:
Audacity by Melanie Crowder

Genre:
Young Adult, Poetry, Historical Fiction

My rating: 4/5 stars

One-word description: Empowering

When I attended WriteOnCon, an online writing conference,
earlier this month, I logged into a live panel featuring five different authors
of novels in verse. Of course, I was excited. These authors wrote poetry after
all! And YA/MG fiction as well. It’s like the best of both worlds. Audacity is
one of the many books I added to my to-be-read list and the first I requested
from my local library.

When I noticed that the cover says “inspired by a true
story,” I knew I’d picked the right book. Historical fiction it is! I don’t
know nearly enough about suffrage as I should, and I feel like this novel is a
great place to start.

This particular novel in verse is the first that I’ve read
(which isn’t too many, truth be told) that included form poetry, as if the
novel itself laughed at the idea of formalities and took flight all on its own.
Which is of course wonderful considering all the bird imagery in the book
underlying the theme of fire.

I only wish the story would have delved more into the fire
that took place in March 25, 1911. Instead, the book ends with the date
November 23, 1909, about two years earlier, and focuses on the strike rather
than the reform itself. While the fire is mentioned in the historical note at
the end, it is not in the novel itself: “When Clara and […] many others spoke
in the aftermath of the fire of the need for reform, the public finally
listened.”

I’m also not sure I knew the main character’s name, Clara
Lemlich, until the acknowledgements. But I suppose it’s hard with first person
and with poetic novels to include the narrator’s name. As a writer, I know
firsthand how hard it is to slip the main character’s name into a story told
from a first-person perspective.

You will lose,
I sayif you try to strike
on your own without us.
[...] It is only by standing together
—men and women—
that we can ever hope
to outlast them.

In this particular passage, Clara is speaking to the men’s
union, but I believe her words are still applicable today. If we’re going to
call for public reform, we cannot go about it by putting another group down,
whether its men vs. women or one race vs. another. I’m not saying that standing
together is easy. It certainly wasn’t for Clara, who faced rejection, slander,
beatings. But she stood by her belief in fighting for women’s rights to work in
a good environment.

Of course, there’s so much more to the novel than Clara’s
involvement in the unions. There’s her passion for learning and reading poetry,
her experience as a Yiddish immigrant to New York during the early 1900s, her
interest in birds and beauty even among a crowded city.

In all, I gave Audacity
4/5 stars for an excellent narrative, imagery, and themes but some vague
details. Reminiscent of The Boston Girl,
I’d recommend this novel to fans of historical fiction, poetry, and women’s
rights in employment. I look forward to reading my next novel in verse!

Does the sound of Audacity
spark your interest? You might also enjoy these titles: The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant, Full Cicada Moon by Marilyn Hilton, Inside Out & Back Again by
Thanhha Lai, and Outrun the Moon by
Stacey Lee.

Keep your eye out for future posts! I have one on 7 Reasons
I Enjoy Novels in Verse in the works.

Let’s chat! Has Audacity
made it to your to-be-read list yet? Have you read it? If you like novels in
verse, which is your favorite? What are some of your favorite poetic quotes?